Monday, March 26, 2012

Taking a Creative Approach to Research: Holy Family Tuition Records

Recently I corresponded with a researcher who had come up with a creative approach to answering a family history question. She just needed someone in Chicago to carry out her plan. I said, "Sure. I'll give it a try if it's okay with you if I blog about it." She said it was.

What she knew:

Her husband's ancestor's family was in Chicago in 1868.

One of the family's children was baptized at Holy Family in 1873.

The mother was listed in the 1880 New York census as a widow.

Her questions:

When did the father die?

When did the family return to New York?

The researcher had learned that Holy Family Parish School Tuition Records, 1865-1879 were available at the Loyola University Archives and Special Collections and she thought that at least one of the family's children would have been enrolled. Her hope was that the tuition records could help her zero in on when the family left Chicago.

I called the Archives and made an appointment to visit. (Hours and FAQs) It was an easy trip on the Red Line. I got off at the Loyola stop, crossed the street to campus, and walked toward the lake. The sidewalk wound between a number of buildings and easily led to the Cudahy Library. I showed identification, signed in, and made my way to the archives room where I was met by an associate archivist. She was friendly and welcoming and went out of her way to help me access the records I was there to use.

The Holy Family Parish School Tuition Records were kept in large bound ledgers and although the bindings were somewhat fragile, the pages were sturdy and easy to use.

Entries included the following information:

When Received (I'm not sure what this date means. On the example page, that date is given as "November 20" for the first
entry but tuition is only recorded for March through June.)

Name (the child's name)

Age (the child's age)

Parents (usually the first name of a father)

Residence (the family's street address)

Rate per Month (this seemed to vary from 0 - $1.00 on the example page I copied; older children seemed to pay more; some children don't appear to have been charged)

Months (August through July in separate columns)

Room (class assignment)

Fuel (blank on the example page I copied)

The books are divided into sections by first letter of surname, but entries are chronological, not alphabetical. As I read through each year looking for the researcher's family names, I noticed that many children returned year after year and children from the same family were usually entered together. These records could be used to track a family's address. The could also be used to approximate the birth dates of children in a family.

I'll include two example images below so that you can get a feel for what the records are like.

So, was the search of use to the researcher? I think so. I was
able to find one entry listing two of the family's children and from it
the researcher learned that the family was still in Chicago in 1874,
living at a previously-unknown address. The children were received in
April but they paid no tuition, so it wasn't possible to determine when
they might have left the school.

I really liked the researcher's resourcefulness in trying to answer a hard-to-answer question. If you know of any other off-the-radar Chicago records that could be used in similar ways, please post a comment and share.

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A kind reader shared a link to a Finding Aid for Holy Family Records. Follow the link to learn about the records that are available at the Archives.

6 comments:

Cynthia, this is a particularly timely post for me. Right now in my own blog, I'm researching priests from a specific parish in south Chicago (St. Anne's) who have corresponded with my husband's grandmother and great-grandmother. I have letters saved from the 1870s onward.

While genealogy is normally reserved for study of family lines--and by definition, celibate priests would not have any children to research them--I feel so strongly about recognizing these priests and reconstructing their bios. Your post opened my eyes to using alternate, church-based resources to rediscover the story of these people's lives.

Another great source for Holy Family information is Brother Thomas Mulkerins' book Holy Family Parish. There is a list of contributors to the 1865 altar fundraiser where I have found some ancestors.https://archive.org/details/holyfamilyparish00mulk(p. 59)

About Me

I have a bachelor's degree in Japanese and a master's degree in reading instruction, but for the past ten years, I've focused on helping people locate genealogical records for Chicago and Cook County research.
I'm a co-founder of Genlighten.com and I provide customer support for the site.
If I'm not doing something genealogy-related, I'm probably playing the banjo or fiddle. I discovered old-time music in 2008 and it's become a very happy part of my life.